Wednesday, March 7, 2012

COMPUTING AND COMMUNICATION


Briefings

Technology Review's primers on key emerging technologies.

Social Networks

These online communities are redefining how we find and share information, but will operators be able to assuage privacy concerns?

Why Only Designers Can Create New Programming Languages

Attempts to verify the utility of languages stifle innovation.

Seven Computer Security Fears to Shape 2012

Experts at the RSA security conference predict the worst threats for the year ahead.

How Young Is Too Young to Learn to Code?

Scratch, Jr. is aimed at children who have yet to learn their ABCs.

Stochastic Pattern Recognition Dramatically Outperforms Conventional Techniques

A stochastic computer, designed to help an autonomous vehicle navigate, outperforms a conventional computer by three orders of magnitude, say computer scientists

Physicists Predict The Existence of Time Crystals

If crystals exist in spatial dimensions, then they ought to exist in the dimension of time too, says Nobel prize-winning physicist
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Technology review

Today's News


Cellulosic Ethanol Gets a $100 Million Boost

Virdia plans to make cheap sugars from wood chips, tackling the industry's greatest challenge.

Tiny Transmitters Could Help Avert Data Throttling

A cluster of the devices can replace the transmitters atop a typical cell tower.

Eavesdropping Antennas Can Steal Your Smart Phone's Secrets

The processors in smart phones and tablets leak radio signals that betray the encryption keys used to protect sensitive data.

Exploring the World, Note by Note

Pinwheel, a new site created by Flickr cofounder Caterina Fake, lets users post virtual notes anywhere.

Windows 8: Microsoft Gambles on a Tablet-centric Future

Does it make sense to merge a conventional desktop interface with one optimized for touch?

Business Impact

March | The Future of Money


Beyond Credit Cards: Q&A with Dan Schulman of American Express

American Express built its brand around a material that's going out of style. One word: plastic.

With Mobile Internet, Money Is Up for Grabs

Ben Milne doesn't look like a banker. Not one bit. So why shouldn't he rebuild the world's money system?

Can ARPA-E Solve Energy Problems?

The young agency is popular, but its short-term research programs aren't enough.

A Big Jump in Battery Capacity

If Envia can overcome some key problems, its technology could cut the cost of electric-car batteries in half.

Printing Muscle

Organovo's 3-D printer creates human tissues that could help speed drug discovery.

How a Web Link Can Take Control of Your Phone

If Android users click the wrong link, an attacker could intercept phone calls and track their location.

Phone Call 'Line Noise' Could Expose Thieves

Every call has an audio fingerprint—now one company uses that information to identify fraudsters.

Defense Department Wants More Control over the Internet

The U.S. government says it must govern Internet technology more closely to protect against cyberattacks.

Through a Camera, Darkly

The technology of lenses has made art richer and more meaningful for hundreds of years. A Gerhard Richter retrospective shows Germany's most famous artist responding to the camera over a lifetime of painting.

To-Do App Has that Simple Touch

Clear pares down a to-do list to just a few functions, and gives you pinch-and-swipe control.

City with Superfast Internet Invites Innovators to Play

A Tennessee city with one-gigabit-per-second Internet runs a $300,000 contest to find ways of using it.

Battery to Take On Diesel and Natural Gas

Aquion Energy says its batteries could make the power grid unnecessary in some countries.

Foundation Medicine: Personalizing Cancer Drugs

Foundation Medicine is offering a test that helps oncologists choose drugs targeted to the genetic profile of a patient's tumor cells. Has personalized cancer treatment finally arrived?
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Special Report


Clean Energy

A Technology Review Special Report focusing on innovations in alternative energy sources and the technologies driving them.
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Nominate a TR35

Who are the best young innovators from around the world? We're taking nominations for the 2012 edition of the TR35.

Technology Review Archives


October 1974

Electronic Materials of the Future: Predicting the Unpredictable

By Robert A. Laudise and Kurt Nassau
Thirty years ago, a decision-maker might have invested heavily in the further development of vacuum-tube technology. Three years later, the transistor was invented. Where is the future of electronic materials now?
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Technology Review Lists

TR50

Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:
Wildcat Discovery
OnLive
Siemens
Applied Materials
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